Project Description: Planet Ahmee is dying, and there’s only one robot with a heart big enough to rescue it. Meet Lyka, friend to all living creatures, as she sets off across the galaxy on a quest to find the answers that will save her home. Leaving behind everything she knows and loves, Lyka travels through space to the strange and wild land of the scientist who created her . . . planet Earth! In a high-octane race against time, she must explore all seven continents to find hidden symbols and unlock the knowledge they represent. Will she make it before Ahmee collapses and Lyka’s fellow robots are lost in space forever?

Lyka’s Adventure is an experiential learning project that uses collaboration and creative problem solving to put education directly in the hands of students. In the fall of 2012, two classrooms, a continent apart, worked together to get a lost robot home. Over 10 days the robot named Lyka traveled 2000 plus miles, visited 56 cities and found support from students, parents and teachers in 12 countries all powered by the imagination of the students. From 2013 on Lyka has traveled the globe visiting students and schools as the storyworld expands. At the conclusion of the project Lyka is scheduled to be shot into space aboard a NASA rocket. The hope is when the children look up into the night sky they’ll be reminded of how far their imaginations can carry them.

In May 2014, Lyka traveled to Australia to kick off a global tour that will go for the next two years. Penguin is publishing 8 books that will capture Lyka’s Adventure around the world.

A learning and play platform for 21st century kids, educators and parents. Lyka has traveled the world traveling over 40,000 miles and visited over 3,00 students around the world. She’s even traveled 90,000′ to the edge of the atmosphere. In 2018 she’ll be launched into space with data children have helped to her to gather on her journey around the world.

The project could become something of a model for education… exposing the participants to critical thinking skills and structured creativity that the students will need to be successful.– WIRED

Lyka’s litte adventure could be the next big innovation in how kids learn across platforms. – COOLMOMTECH.COM

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In a few weeks’ time, I’ll be in Australia traveling the country with a small plush connected toy named Lyka. A robot scientist with a big heart, Lyka is from another planet decimated by climate change. Sent to Earth in a last desperate attempt to save her home, she relies on students to help her travel the globe. Together, the students and Lyka explore Earth as they search for insight that prevents her planet from dying.

Lyka’s Adventure is the first release from our new smart toy/media company Connected Sparks. Incubated through a series of hackathons and immersive labs that bring together storytellers, game designers, data scientists, UX specialists, educators, parents and students, Lyka’s Adventure is an example of story-driven innovation. The project is a mixture of physical and digital assets. Designed with children for children, the effort has been informed by a process that mixes design thinking, rapid prototyping and storytelling.

Over the years I’ve written about the rapid commoditization of technology and its impact on entertainment. I’ve waxed on about the value of data and the promise of the “Internet of things,” with its ability to harness networks and sensor technology to tell stories. My work over the last decade has experimented with new forms and functions of storytelling. I’ve made a conscious effort to diversify the way in which I design, create, fund, produce and distribute my work. The results have been mixed. I’ve had great success and epic failures, but in between rest, valuable insights. I now understand the benefit of failing fast and learning from it. But the entertainment industry has no interest in R&D (research and development). Instead, old models are bled dry, and data is harnessed as a tool to mitigate risk, often resulting in films, TV and music that are homogenized.

While independents wade through an awkward digital transition, I find myself often referring to a quote from architect and full systems thinker Buckminster Fuller: “You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.” The quote rings true across the many industries and institutions struggling to maintain control and market share in an ever-shifting digital landscape.

But the temptation to step into an established structure can be strong. When we first started Lyka’s Adventure, I pitched it as a series to a number of TV networks. The response was positive, but as the negotiations advanced it became clear that we were stepping into a deal that was akin to tenant farming. The network would own everything, and in exchange for signing it over, we’d share in the promise of a potential backend while at the same time relinquishing creative control.

We walked away from the negotiations and turned our focus to developing a beta. In order to know if children and parents would respond, we needed to rapidly prototype the concept. In the fall of 2011 we tested with two classrooms, one in Los Angeles and the other in Montreal. Over 10 days the students worked together to navigate a small plush toy with a team of photographers from Montreal to Los Angeles. Lyka’s Adventure was powered by the students’ imaginations and curriculum. When the journey concluded in Los Angeles, Lyka had traveled more than 2,000 miles and visited 56 cities.

The results of the beta not only provided insight on how to improve the project, but it also ended up leading to an eight-book publishing deal with Penguin. By demonstrating the concept, we captured hearts and minds. Lyka’s actual adventure across North America became part of a larger story that reached multiple countries and generated more than 700 student projects in just 10 days. Making the concept real not only attracted the interest from Penguin, but it also helped us to negotiate a more innovative publishing deal where Connected Sparks was able to retain all film, TV, game, educational and merchandizing rights around Lyka’s Adventure.

Unlike any other moment in history it is now possible to reach large audiences for little cost. There is a window of opportunity to do things differently — chance to shape stories that are reflective of our times, not only in subject but also in form and function. For those willing to experiment and fail an exciting world awaits. In many ways I find it similar to the independent spirit of filmmaking that I fell in love with when I held a Bolex in my hands for the first time. The only difference now is there are new tools and so many more opportunities for creative collaboration

Lyka’s Adventure Penguin Book’s series

Lance and Lyka tour Australia

Case Study
A look at the origins of Lyka (formerly known as Laika) written by Dr. Ele Jansen. To view click the image below.